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My garden pond

By Richard Jones on 02/01/2008 11:14:00

A catastrophic and fatal error closed down the laptop on Friday and left me unable to post a blog entry last week. This followed an equally frustrating Christmas ipod incident.So I'm venting my anger by working on something that does not have a plug, and for which I do not need t...


Free range chickens

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/01/2008 11:29:00

If you have been struck by the sad plight of the battery hen recently and wish to do something about it then remember one important fact: chickens are rubbish gardeners. Forget the fanciful notion you had of having fluffy feathered folk strutting around your garden grazing on aph...


Harlequin ladybird

By Richard Jones on 06/02/2008 11:29:00

The inaugural meeting of the Ivydale Primary School Natural History Club had its first show-and-tell session on Wednesday. The first ladybird of the year had made an appearance.It was crawling about in the back bedroom of one of the children and she proudly presented it in her fl...


Sparrows in Paris

By Richard Jones on 23/04/2008 10:57:00

, commuters, joggers and roller bladers (even though there are signs saying not to, but hey - this is Paris). There's lots going on but I have to admit that there are not many signs of wildlife. The plants are fastidiously tended and the borders manicured


Newts and pond water

By Richard Jones on 02/07/2008 11:14:00

at the weekend. It was only when I was looking at the RSPB Homes for Wildlife website that I notice they advise not to use tap-water. Since the new ring-main was built through South London about 10 years ago, the chlorine levels in our drinking water have gone


Plants on railway embankments

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/08/2008 12:33:00

maintenance team and trespasser), which provides a habitat for wildlife. In more urban areas there are escapees from people's gardens - for example on the route to London from my house there's a great swathe of trackside covered with Fallopia baldschuanicum


Out and about in autumn

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 14/10/2008 15:09:00

woodland in Yorkshire. Acidic soil makes for much brighter autumn colours.Lytes Cary, Somerset: one of the smaller, more intimate National Trust properties. There are lots of autumn activities including wildlife trails around the gardens and estate


Ladybirds

By Richard Jones on 19/11/2008 09:15:16

A bit of garden clearance in the rain is always therapeutic. Working off a good lunch and feeling the drip of water down my neck, I feel my endeavours are all the more noble. Actually all I'm doing is ripping the vine out of the apple tree it's been trying to smother for the last...


Geoffrey Smith

By Adam Pasco on 02/03/2009 15:32:14

featured on the front cover of the very first issue of Gardeners' World Magazine back in March 1991 and wrote a wildlife gardening column for us for many years. I've fond memories of visiting his garden near Harrogate to take pictures for the magazine


Long-tailed tits

By Richard Jones on 01/04/2009 14:56:40

Big news from the RSPB Big Garden Birdwatch survey results just out: the long-tailed tit has made it, for the first time in the survey's 30-year history, into the top 10. I hardly ever saw these gregarious little birds until I moved to East Dulwich a decade ago. Until then, I'd a...


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